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      Book

      Resilience Engineering
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      Book

      Resilience Engineering

      DOI link for Resilience Engineering

      Resilience Engineering book

      Concepts and Precepts

      Resilience Engineering

      DOI link for Resilience Engineering

      Resilience Engineering book

      Concepts and Precepts
      Edited ByErik Hollnagel, David D. Woods, Nancy Leveson
      Edition 1st Edition
      First Published 2006
      eBook Published 17 March 2017
      Pub. Location London
      Imprint CRC Press
      DOI https://doi.org/10.1201/9781315605685
      Pages 416
      eBook ISBN 9781315605685
      Subjects Engineering & Technology
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      Hollnagel, E., Woods, D.D., & Leveson, N. (Eds.). (2006). Resilience Engineering: Concepts and Precepts (1st ed.). CRC Press. https://doi.org/10.1201/9781315605685

      ABSTRACT

      For Resilience Engineering, 'failure' is the result of the adaptations necessary to cope with the complexity of the real world, rather than a breakdown or malfunction. The performance of individuals and organizations must continually adjust to current conditions and, because resources and time are finite, such adjustments are always approximate. This definitive new book explores this groundbreaking new development in safety and risk management, where 'success' is based on the ability of organizations, groups and individuals to anticipate the changing shape of risk before failures and harm occur. Featuring contributions from many of the worlds leading figures in the fields of human factors and safety, Resilience Engineering provides thought-provoking insights into system safety as an aggregate of its various components, subsystems, software, organizations, human behaviours, and the way in which they interact. The book provides an introduction to Resilience Engineering of systems, covering both the theoretical and practical aspects. It is written for those responsible for system safety on managerial or operational levels alike, including safety managers and engineers (line and maintenance), security experts, risk and safety consultants, human factors professionals and accident investigators.

      TABLE OF CONTENTS

      chapter |6 pages

      Prologue: Resilience Engineering Concepts

      ByDavid D. Woods, Erik Hollnagel

      part 1|86 pages

      Emergence

      chapter 1|9 pages

      Resilience – the Challenge of the Unstable

      ByErik Hollnagel

      chapter |1 pages

      Systems are Ever-Changing

      ByYushi Fujita

      chapter 2|14 pages

      Essential Characteristics of Resilience

      ByDavid D. Woods

      chapter 3|6 pages

      Defining Resilience

      ByAndrew Hale, Tom Heijer

      chapter |1 pages

      Nature of Changes in Systems

      ByYushi Fujita

      chapter 4|11 pages

      Complexity, Emergence, Resilience …

      ByJean Pariès

      chapter 5|11 pages

      A Typology of Resilience Situations

      ByRon Westrum

      chapter |1 pages

      Resilient Systems

      ByYushi Fujita

      chapter 6|8 pages

      Incidents – Markers of Resilience or Brittleness?

      ByDavid D. Woods, Richard I. Cook

      chapter 7|16 pages

      Resilience Engineering: Chronicling the Emergence of Confused Consensus

      BySidney Dekker

      part 2|179 pages

      Cases and Processes

      chapter 8|29 pages

      Engineering Resilience into Safety-Critical Systems

      ByNancy Leveson, Nicolas Dulac, David Zipkin, Joel Cutcher-Gershenfeld, John Carroll, Betty Barrett

      chapter 9|23 pages

      Is Resilience Really Necessary? The Case of Railways

      ByAndrew Hale, Tom Heijer

      chapter |1 pages

      Systems Are Never Perfect

      ByYushi Fujita

      chapter 10|4 pages

      Structure for Management of Weak and Diffuse Signals

      ByLars Axelsson

      chapter 11|26 pages

      Organisational Resilience and Industrial Risk

      ByNick McDonald

      chapter |1 pages

      An Evil Chain Mechanism Leading to Failures

      ByYushi Fujita

      chapter 12|21 pages

      Safety Management in Airlines

      ByArthur Dijkstra

      chapter 13|17 pages

      Taking Things in One’s Stride: Cognitive Features of Two Resilient Performances

      ByRichard I. Cook, Christopher Nemeth

      chapter 14|11 pages

      Erosion of Managerial Resilience: From Vasa to NASA

      ByRhona Flin

      chapter 15|18 pages

      Learning How to Create Resilience in Business Systems

      ByGunilla Sundström, Erik Hollnagel

      chapter 16|19 pages

      Optimum System Safety and Optimum System Resilience: Agonistic or Antagonistic Concepts?

      ByRené Amalberti

      part 3|86 pages

      Challenges for a Practice of Resilience Engineering

      chapter 17|11 pages

      Properties of Resilient Organizations: An Initial View

      ByJohn Wreathall

      chapter |1 pages

      Remedies

      ByYushi Fujita

      chapter 18|26 pages

      Auditing Resilience in Risk Control and Safety Management Systems

      ByAndrew Hale, Frank Guldenmund, Louis Goossens

      chapter 19|11 pages

      How to Design a Safety Organization: Test Case for Resilience Engineering

      ByDavid D. Woods

      chapter |1 pages

      Rules and Procedures

      ByYushi Fujita

      chapter 20|10 pages

      Distancing Through Differencing: An Obstacle to Organizational Learning Following Accidents

      ByRichard I. Cook, David D. Woods

      chapter 21|8 pages

      States of Resilience

      ByErik Hollnagel, Gunilla Sundström

      chapter |12 pages

      Epilogue: Resilience Engineering Precepts

      ByErik Hollnagel, David D. Woods
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